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Jackie Brown (1997) is a more traditional caper (and love story) based on
Elmore Leonard's book "Rum Punch". The plot if overlong, mainly because
Tarantino can't resist the temptation to show off his talent in crafting
dialogues.
The universe of small-time crooks and failed middle-aged characters is
not particularly exciting because their interactions is always almost
sterile, superficial, emotion-less.
Jackie Brown is a middle-aged flight attendant, who works for a lousy airline.
In a beach condo,
a black man, Ordell (the owner of the condo, and of the sexy blonde, Melanie,
who lives in it), and a middle-aged white man, Louis (just released from jail), watch
advertisements for assault weapons.
The black man receives a call that a friend has been arrested, and visits a bail bondsman, Max, to buy the man's release.
Then kills the man so he can never testify against him.
Jackie Brown is caught by two police officers: she is smuggling money
and drugs out of the country on behalf of the black arms dealer, Ordell.
Ray and his partner are after Ordell, not after her, but she does not want
to cooperate. So she is arrested, and the judge sets the usual bail, which
Ordell asks Max to pay... the same way he paid for the release of his
accomplice and then killed the man to shut his mouth forever.
But Jackie is smarter: she welcomes Ordell's night visit with a gun, and
convinces him that she can be trusted, especially if he is willing to pay
her a good salary while she does time in jail for him.
Advised by Max, who is becoming her best friend, Jackie instead tells the police
she wants to make a deal (testifying against Ordell in return for immunity).
Then she tells Ordell the truth, but justifies her "betrayal" as a way to
get the cops' trust and be allowed to fly again. She even convinces him to
give him a percentage of the money that she will smuggle into the country
under the cops' nose.
In the meantime, Louis and Melanie, alone in the condo, chat and then casually
make love (just three minutes, and he does not exactly satisfies her).
All Melanie does is watch tv, get high and get laid.
Louis is supposed to be Ordell's right-hand man, but doesn't do much else than
hang around him.
Jackie has devised a plan to double-cross everybody. She plans to smuggle
a huge sum for Ordell, with the collaboration of the police. Then she has
enlisted Max, who is tired of being a bondsman, to run away with the money
while she delivers an empty bag to both the police and Ordell.
The exchange takes place at a department store, in a fitting room. Jackie
has the bag full of money. Louis drives Melanie to pick up the bag. But Jackie
gives Melanie a bag that contains very little money, and leaves the
real money in her own bag. Then she walks out and tells the cops that
Melanie ran away with all the money.
When everybody has left the premises,
Max simply retrieves third bag that Jackie left
behind in the fitting room.
Outside, Louis loses his nerves and shoots Melanie dead. Then drives away with
Ordell, but Ordell soon realizes that Jackie ripped him off with Max's help.
Ordell kills Louis and walks away, determined to take his revenge.
But Jackie is not finished with him: she sends Max to apologize and ask
for a meeting. Then she delivers Ordell to the cops, who shoot him dead when
he walks in with a gun.
Jackie and Max are hardened, failed, middle-aged people, but they have been
loyal to each other, and now can look forward to their retirement. But not
together: she takes off for Spain, he hangs up the phone on what would have
been his next case.

Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) is a mixture of thriller and action movie
that recycles Hollywood and Hong Kong cliches in a rather trivial manner.
A massive yawn-inducing story, it boasts some of most ricidulously implausible
scenes in the history of implausible Hollywood plots.

A bleeding scared woman, lying on the ground. Heavy steps of cowboy boots on a
wooden floor. He washes blood from her face with a handkerchief signed "Bill",
and claims he is not being sadistic. Then shoots her.
The same woman drives in a truck to a middle-class neighborhood, walks into
a house and begins a kung-fu fight with a black housewife. A school bus stops
in the front of the house and the little daughter of the housewife walks into
the house. The two women (with bleeding faces) stop fighting and behave as
if they were old friends in front of the girl. The moment the girl disappers
into her room, the housewife tries to kill the blonde, but the blonde is faster
in stabbing her. The child walks into the kitchen and sees her mom dead. The
blonde apologizes to her and walks back to her truck. She picks up a piece
of paper and crosses out the second name of the list. The first name was Oren
and is already crossed out.
A flashback shows what happened four and a half years earlier. The blonde
(pregnant) lies lifeless on the floor of a chapel, surrounded by more dead
bodies: her groom, the reverend and his wife. The sheriff's footsteps on the
wooden floor sound like Bill's footsteps.
The blonde is taken to a hospital and lies in a coma. A nurse (Elle) with
a eye-patch
is ready to kill her, but Bill calls her and tells her to abort the mission.
Four years later, the blonde wakes up scared in the same hospital bed. She has
been in a coma for four years. She hears steps approaching and pretends to
be still unconscious. The male nurse has been selling her body to customers
for four years. She gets rid of this one, kills the nurse, and runs away in
a wheelchair. She steals the truck and sets her mind to take revenge on the
four people who tried to kill her: three women (including the black housewife)
and a man.
An manga interlude (and a Morricone-style soundtrack).
depicts the life of one of the women, Oren. This Japanese
girl witnessed the murder of her parents, and years later took revenge on
the pedophile who did it. Then she became a top murderer
The blonde takes just a few hours to fully recover
and then drives the truck out of the parking lot, on her way to kill.
She flies to Japan, gets a sword and hunts Oren. When she finds her (Oren
has become a boss of sort), the blonde has to kill an army of samurais,
but, of course, this American blonde who just recovered from four years of
coma has suddenly become a world champion of samurais.
Then she also kills Oren after a duel in the snow.
She crosses out Oren's name from the list (the first name on the list)
and interrogates Oren's cute interpreter to find out about Bill and
his Deadly Vipers.

Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004) was a sequel, even more tedious than the first one.

Death Proof (2007) was a parody of amateurish B movies.

Django Unchained (2012) is a poor parody of the spaghetti westerns of
the 1960s, a painfully slow movie done by an amateurish director.

Two slave traders are leading a chain gang of negroes through the night.
A very articulate German-born doctor, riding in a funny carriage, approaches
them and asks for Django.
He needs him to identify three brothers who are wanted dead or alive for murder.
The slave traders are not friendly, the doctor shoots both and kills one.
He then takes off with Django and lets the other slaves off free armed with
a gun (that they use to kill the surviving slave trader).
The doctor tells Django that he is a bounty hunter. He takes Django to
town and walks straight into the saloon with the negro. The townfolks have
never seen a negro on a horse, let alone enter a saloon. The doctor has to kill
the town's sheriff who wants to evict the negro. The marshall's men surround
the saloon, but the doctor exhibits a warrant for the sheriff, who was a wanted
man. The doctor and the negro ride out of town with the bounty money.
They ride into a plantation, Django dressed like a valet and treated like
a free man. They kill the three wanted men and Django collects his first bounty.
Then they have to get rid of a posse of pathetically incompetent
hooded horseriders that attacks them at night.
Flashbacks have shown us the white man who tortured Django and who flogged his wife.
The doctor offers Django a partnership and promises to help Django recover his wife Broomhilda.
After a lucrative winter the doctor accompanies Django to the cotton plantation
where Broomhilda is kept
The owner, Calvin, forces blacks to fight each other to death.
To prove that he is a tough businessman, Django watches coldly when Calvin
orders that his dogs be allowed to eat an escaped slave alive.
Calvin is convinced that Django belongs to their club of sadistic businessmen
and lets him stay with the doctor in his mansion, but
Calvin's black butler, apparently even more racist than his master, is shocked.
Broomhilda just tried to run away so she is being kept naked in a pit.
However, she speaks German and this is the pretext that the doctor (whose
first language is German) uses to be introduced to her. She is dressed nicely
and presented to him. When they are alone, the doctor tells her that Django is
there and she faints when she sees him. The doctor pretends to be interested
in buying one of Calvin's deadly fighters, but the black butler senses that
the doctor is really after Broomhilda and guesses correctly that she must be
Django's wife. Calvin gives the doctor a lecture on the biological
inferiority of blacks and then blackmails the doctor to pay a huge amount for
Broomhilda or he will kill her. The doctor pays and gets the bill of sale
but Calvin also wants a handshake. The doctor smiles and then shoots Calvin
dead, but is in turn killed by his bodyguard.
In what must be the most ridiculous scene of western cinema, a colossal
gunfight ensues during which Django massacres lots of white men.
The black butler, loyal to the end to his white masters, holds Broomhilda
hostage and Django has to surrender. He is kept hanging upside down in a
dungeon until he is sold as a slave. However, Django tells his escort that
he is a bounty hunter and talks them into releasing him, after which he kills
them and rides back to the mansion. He kills more people, waits for the others
to return from Calvin's funeral, kills more of them. Finally, he can elope
with his wife and the papers signed by Calvin that declare her free.
Last he confronts the black butler, sets fire to the mansion and leaves him to
burn alive in it.

Inglourious Basterds (2009), one of his best films,
is a farcical war movie that images a
different ending of World War II. Tarantino here excels at humor, not violence.
The film opens in 1941, when Germany has just occupied France and a German
colonel, the calm, rational and multilingual Hans, is in charge of hunting
down Jews. He visits and interviews a farmer whose farm has already been
searched multiple times after a Jewish family mysteriously disappeared.
(Very odd that they switch from French to English, even if one is French and
the other one is German).
As they are talking, initially the farmer looks credible but then the camera
moves down and shows us the Jews hiding under the floorboard. Hans hints that
he knows that the farmer is lying, the farmer breaks down and points at the
floorboard, the colonel orders his soldiers to shoot through the floorboard.
One little girl manages to escape, Shosanna. As she is running desperately
through the open fields, Hans spares her life and mutters "see you later",
certain of catching her some other time.
In 1944 Germany is losing the war. A ragtag Jewish militia trained by the USA
has infiltrated France and is carrying out guerrilla attacks under the command
of the ruthless Aldo, who takes no prisoners and orders his men to scalp any killed German.
Hitler in person is alarmed by the activities of this group and by the
fame of one of them, nicknamed the Bear Jew. A German soldier personally
related to Hitler how his platoon was captured in an ambush and everbody
except him was killed. The truth is that this soldier was the only captured
German willing to betray his comrades and that's why Aldo spared his life.
A voiceover narrates the flashback in which the Bear Jew (or Donny) uses a club
to savagely smash the head of the German colonel who refuses to collaborate,
while an infamous renegade, Hugo, which another flashback shows killing
13 German soldiers, cheers. (The soundtrack mocks Morricone's western
soundtracks). Aldo tattooed a swastika on the traitor's forehead.
Shosanna now runs a movie theater in the capital under the false name of
Emmanuelle. One day she is approached by a handsome German soldier, Frederick,
who later stalks her in a restaurant. She learns that Frederick is a famous
war hero in Germany. He tells her that
Goebbels, who is in charge of German propaganda and has a sexy Italian
girlfriend, Francesca, ordered him to make a movie of his legendary action
(he, left alone, killed 300 French soldiers).
Frederick has her driven to a lunch with Goebbels in person: Frederick wants
the premiere of his film to be shown in Emmanuelle's small theater, and
Emmanuelle cannot say no. Suddenly colonel Hans shows up. He is now in charge
of security and interrogates her. She maintains her cool but recognizes him.
She immediately works out a plan to assassinate Goebbels and any other German
notable who will attend the premiere in her theater, and enlists her partner
and lover, a black Frenchman, Marcel, to stage a fire in the theater using
highly flammable film. She also wants to alter Frederick's film in some
way that we are not told.
Meanwhile, unbeknownst to her, the British are planning an attack of their own.
They have learned that the premiere will be attended by several German leaders
and want Aldo's "basterds" to blow up bombs in Shosanna's theater.
Aldo learns that a famous actress, Bridget, is actually a British spy who
has pretended to defect to the Germans. She will find a way to get Aldo and
his men inside the theater.
When Aldo's men, disguised as German officials, meet Bridget for what should be a secret rendezvous in a tavern, they
are spotted by a German official who easily finds out that they are not German.
This causes a massive shootout in which all the people in the restaurant are
killed except a German soldier and Bridget. Aldo promises to spare the German's
life if he surrenders but Bridget coldly executes him. Aldo then tortures the
wounded Bridget because he suspects that she set up a trap for his men.
Bridget proves her innocence and tells Aldo that the premiere has been moved
to Shosanna's small theater and that Hitler in person will attend.
Bridget can smuggle Aldo and his men inside the theater as her Italian
assistants.
However, Hans investigates the massacre and suspects foul play, especially
when he finds high-heel woman shoes and an autograph that Bridget signed for
a fan.
The day of the premiere comes. Shosanna and Marcel are ready to project the
film and then set fire to the theater. Bridget introduces Aldo and his men
as her Italian friends. Alas, Hans speaks fluent Italian and easily figures
out that those Italians are not Italian at all. He confronts Bridget in his
office and, certain of her guilt, strangles her on the floor. He then orders
the arrest of Aldo and he correctly guesses his real identity: the legendary
guerrilla leader. However, Hans neither kills Aldo nor tries to stop the plan.
Hans has his own plan: he wants to make a deal with the enemy. He asks
Aldo to put him in touch with a general who can grant him immunity from
prosecution for war crimes and grant him a nice resettlement in the USA
in return for letting the attack continue as planned. Aldo's men will kill
Hitler and all the other leaders and this will end the war.
Hans wants a promise that he will be described as the double agent who
singlehandedly ended the war. Aldo's superiors accept the deal.
They don't know that Shosanna is planning her own attack. Just then Marcel
is locking all the doors of the theater, while Aldo's men are deploying the
explosives.
The projection of the film causes an ecstatic rapture in Hitler and the
other leaders. Frederick leaves his seat to visit Shosanna in the projection
room and she shoots him to make sure he doesn't interfere with the plan;
but he shoots her too before dying, so they both lie dead on the floor.
Suddenly the movie stops showing Frederick's epic mission and shows a
close-up of Shosanna telling the audience that they are all going to die
and Marcel sets fire to the theater.
Just then Aldo's basterds launch their own attack with machine guns and
explosives. The panicking audience tries in vain to leave the theater.
All the German leaders are killed.
The screen shows Shosanna laughing as the Germans die.
Meanwhile, Aldo is obeying orders. Hans surrenders to him and Aldo is supposed
to take him to the other side of the border. However, Aldo first tattoos
a swastika on Hans' forehead which, unlike the Nazist uniform, Hans will not
be able to remove.

The Hateful Eight (2015) was another western, a sort of sequel to
Django Unchained. The most relevant fact is that it was
the first western scored by Morricone in 34 years.